The Century Foundation
                Contact Us   +   Join Our Mailing List   +   Search
 

The Snapshot: Public Continues to Support Health Care Reform, but Needs Clarity on Congressional Bill
Ruy Teixeira, The Century Foundation, 2/5/2010

President Barack Obama in his State of the Union address doubled down on his commitment to health care reform, which disappointed conservatives who were hoping he’d run away from that commitment. And he left conservatives fuming about his claim that the health care reform plan in Congress suffered from a lack of clear explanation. How can he say that, the conservatives argue, when recent events like the Massachusetts Senate election show that voters have rejected the whole idea of comprehensive health care reform?

But the Massachusetts Senate election showed no such thing. In a Kaiser Family Foundation/Washington Post/Harvard Public Health follow-up survey to the Massachusetts election, voters in that election were asked their views on the Massachusetts Universal Health Insurance Law, a law “assuring that virtually all Massachusetts residents have health insurance.” Massachusetts voters said they favored that law by 68-27, and even conservative Scott Brown’s supporters backed the law by 51-44.

As for Obama’s claim that the public is not well informed about the health care reform bills and would support these bills more if they were clearly explained, he seems to be on very secure ground according to the latest Kaiser Health Tracking poll. In that poll the public’s reaction to 27 different elements of health care reform legislation was tested, and in 22 of those cases the public had a net positive reaction, with more people favorably inclined toward the measure than unfavorably inclined.

Below are the 10 most strongly supported features of the legislation: tax credits to small businesses (73 percent said they were more likely to support legislation with this provision compared to 11 percent who said were less likely); health insurance exchange (67-16); won’t change most people’s existing health care arrangements (66-10); guaranteed issue of coverage despite pre-existing conditions (63-24); Medicaid expansion (62-22); extend dependent coverage through age 25 (60-22); help close the Medicare prescription drug doughnut hole (60-21); increased income taxes on the wealthy (59-24); subsidy assistance to individuals (57-24); and reduce the deficit (56-20).

But much of the public—exactly Obama’s point—does not know these provisions are in the reforms bills that passed the House and the Senate. According to the same poll, among the provisions above that were tested, lack of awareness ranged from a high of 56 percent for closing the doughnut hole to a low of 28 percent for subsidizing individuals. For most provisions, around 40 percent or more of the public was unaware

 
The Health Beat by Maggie Mahar Blog
The Century Foundation fellow, Maggie Mahar discusses today's most pressing health care policy issues in The Health Beat by Maggie Mahar blog. Click here to view.

Getting More Value from Medicare
In “Getting More Value from Medicare,” The Century Foundation, fellow and HealthBeat Blog editor Maggie Mahar points out that past proposals for containing Medicare’s costs, such as putting a cap on physicians’ fees or requiring beneficiaries to pay more for their care, have not worked.

Money-Driven Medicine
View, Money-Driven Medicine: The Real Reason Health Care Costs So Much (Harper/Collins 2006), a book by The Century Foundation's Health Fellow, Maggie Mahar.

A New Deal for Health: How to Cover Everyone and Get Medical Costs under Control
Leif Wellington Haase, Century Foundation Press, 6/1/2005

A Second Opinion
Dr. Arnold Relman, PublicAffairs, The Century Foundation, 4/23/2007

Breathing Easier? The Report of The Century Foundation Working Group on Bioterrorism Preparedness
Leif Wellington Haase, The Century Foundation, 1/13/2005

Medicare Tomorrow
The Century Foundation Task Force on Medicare Reform, Century Foundation Press

The Basics: Medicare Reform (Revised for 2001)
The Century Foundation, 6/1/2001

A Place at the Table: Women's Needs and Medicare Reform
Marilyn Moon, Century Foundation Press, 3/15/2002

Too Much of a Good Thing
Charles R. Morris, Century Foundation Press, 5/1/2000

Contact Us   Join our Mailing List   Search
Home    Publications    News & Opinions   Issues   Related Research   Links   About Us   Press Room
Copyright 2010 The Century Foundation. Privacy Policy
Visit The Century Foundation Web site
www.tcf.org